Throughout the different seasons, I visit various spots in the bosque along the Rio Grande in Albuquerque. In the winter I like looking for bald eagles and porcupines, and in the spring, it’s fun to see where spring snowmelt is saturating restoration projects or creating backwaters for fish habitat.

Early in April 2018, when I visited one of my springtime spots on the west side of the river, the new grove of cottonwood saplings was completely dry and the river on one side of the island was little more than a trickle.

The winter had been dry, the mountains low on snow. Of course there wouldn’t be a roaring snowmelt.

There are positive things happening right now: snows are falling in the mountains, the incoming gubernatorial administration will take water issues more seriously than Gov. Susana Martinez did for eight years and agencies, tribes and nonprofits are working together. But to be sure, the challenges aren’t going away. And they are likely to become more severe in the coming years. In other words, drying rivers and dropping reservoirs will continue to be important stories in the coming years, too.

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